My work collegue, knwing my passion fro rats found
this fantastic news article from a Bristish Newspaper The Guardian. it is
a good news for rat keepers!
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A troupe of elderly dancing rats has opened up the prospect of rejuvenating
ageing humans, scientists revealed yesterday.
Although dietary supplements sold in health food shops might not do much
yet for humans, they put old rodents back on the road again. Bruce Ames, a
cell biologist at the University of California, Berkeley, reports in the Proceedings
of the National Academy of Sciences today that he fed elderly rats two chemicals,
acetyl-L-carintine and the anti-oxidant alpha-lipoic acid. Both are normally
found in mammal cells, and both are sold in US health shops. Then he tested
the animals for memory and stamina.
"With these two supplements together, these old rats got up and did the
macarena," he said. "The brain looks better, they are full of energy: everything
we looked at looks more like a young animal."
His colleague Tony Hagen, of Oregon State University, said: "We also see
a reversal in loss of memory. This is a dual track improvement that is significant
and unique. This is really starting to explode and move out of the realm of
basic research into people."
The University of California has patented the combination. The two scientists
have formed a company, Juvenon, to license the patent from the university.
They do not claim to have found an elixir of youth. But the hope is that there
might be ways of delaying the onset of age related problems.
Dr Ames and his colleague think that the combination "tunes up" the tiny
power packs in the cells known as mitochondria. They had been intrigued by
research in 1999 that showed that old rats responded to one of the compounds.
They eventually tried a combination approach to simultaneously restore activity
and combat the stresses of chemical damage to cells.
They fed both very young and old rats one compound in their water, the other
in their food. After one month, the older rats had responded.
"We significantly reversed the decline in overall activity typical of aged
rats to what you see in a middle aged to young adult rat seven to 10 months
of age," Dr Hagen said. "This is the equivalent of making a 75- to 80-year-old
person act middle aged. We have only shown short term effects but the results
give us the rationale for looking at these things long term."
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